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  • Seismological Society of America  (2)
  • Environmental & Engineering Geophysical Society (EEGS)  (1)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2013-11-14
    Description: In this study, we describe conditions for slidequake generation at three different creeping softrock landslides: the Slumgullion landslide in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado, U.S., the Heumoes slope in the Austrian Alps, and the mudslide in Super-Sauze, French Alps. From a geomorphologic point of view, all three landslides are classified as creeping landslides with average velocities between centimeters to meters per year. Associating creep with viscous flow, and considering the largely saturated, clayey consistency of the slope body, one would not expect any brittle behavior. Thus, it came as a surprise that impulsive seismic signals indicative of shear fracture could be discovered by sensitive passive monitoring methods at all three slopes. These fracture signals occur in episodes, have similar signatures as small earthquakes, and could be located within the slide bodies, i.e. , are evidence of slidequakes. Our investigations identified seismic and aseismic slip in each slide, with slidequakes focusing at significant bedrock structures or at lateral boundaries. Synoptic comparison of three scenarios underlines the importance of landslide-bedrock and landslide-lateral boundary interactions under gravitational loading and Mohr-Coulomb-type failure. Comparison to frictional and asperity models of crustal- and plate-scale boundaries may pave the way to a comprehensive understanding of slidequake generation, and future slope failure prediction.
    Print ISSN: 1083-1363
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2658
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1999-11-01
    Print ISSN: 0895-0695
    Electronic ISSN: 1938-2057
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2001-02-01
    Description: The decrease of microearthquake activity is a controversial possible precursor for mainshock prediction. The calculation of seismic quiescence is a convenient tool to quantify this decrease. However, the actual size of an anomaly significantly depends on the calculation parameters. The necessary averaging over space and time acts as 3D lowpass filter, the sliding statistics windows introduce highpass behavior, and the magnitude threshold shall ensure catalog completeness but also biases the data selection. To argue on any claimed anomaly, the only conclusive solution would be an exhaustive search over all parameters, over an area significantly larger than just the epicenter region, and against a test of the null hypothesis. QMAP is a new mapping approach to process full catalogs, that is, some twenty years of data for areas of one million km (super 2) , with one fixed set of parameters. It utilizes fractal statistics to avoid errors otherwise induced by clusters of aftershock series. QMAP features two different scaling modes, one to display absolute decrease and a second for weighted anomalies by erosion filtering. Applied to California, one can recognize quiescence anomalies of regional scale prior to the Coalinga and Loma Prieta earthquakes. But there are more and greater anomalies distributed all along the San Andreas fault system. Without further criteria to understand these patterns, the additional anomalies degrade seismic quiescence to an observation with high false alarm rate for earthquake prediction.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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